Each of the Narrators, Augusta, Kaye, and Calvin have their own paths through the various Journeys. In The Journey South, Comets in the Yard, Augusta introduces herself, tells her Backstory, and begins the chronolgy of the search for the Califia Gold. |
Backstory |
Story Glimpses: |
Story Glimspes |
End Augusta |
Augusta's Backstory Calvin has asked me
to write a backstory, as though my life were a screenplay.
If it were, something would have
happened to me in childhood, something defining.
Instead, I was a crushingly ordinary
little girl in what I thought was a normal, middle-class family
(including the mildly colorful relatives).
My parents were nice and drove a
late-model Chevrolet.
I had Republican hair, owned lots of
dolls and books, and was on TV once in the Howdy Doody Show.
The only thing
remotely resembling an epiphany was when I realized exactly which subset
of average we inhabited.
One day we went to the beach.
I took my copy of
Paintbox Summer
to read in the car.
On the way home, Mother suggested we
go to a new, drive-in restaurant in Inglewood—The Witchstand.
She loved drive-ins, where you had a
tray set outside the window of the car, and the waitresses brought
frosty malts in tall, silver goblets.
The Witchstand was new then, the
granddaddy of drive-ins, better, even, than Bob's Big Boy.
It was a circular building, and the
cars lined up six rows deep in front of the serving areas; when a car
left at the front, the one behind moved up.
That way, you could see different
people in the cars next to yours. So, I was sitting in
the back seat at The Witchstand, in our pink and gray Chevrolet, in
1960, waiting for cheeseburgers and fries.
My mother had struck up a conversation
with the people in the next car; my father was humming "There's a Long,
Long Trail A-winding" very softly because he liked hamburger stands,
too—thought they were gold mines and often talked of buying one.
Suddenly I realized
that my life was not like the book. Nothing in Beverly Cavanaugh, or
anything else I had read, took place in families like mine or on streets
like Inglewood Boulevard.
Books, and even movies, depicted
parents who were sophisticated and important.
The characters lived on streets with
trees and brick buildings and sturdy banks and town halls and
restaurants with waiters.
Inglewood Boulevard, even then, was a
bright, tacky, slapped-together assemblage of used-car agencies, beauty
parlors, weedy, dry vacant lots, TV and appliance outlets, bars, and
record stores.
And, of course, the huge, drive-in
hamburger stand.
If you couldn't eat, get pretty, see
screen dreams, sing along, or drive away, it wasn't there.
In that moment I knew
that there were two kinds of normal.
One kind (A) lived in the East, or in
books, or on the screen.
The other kind (B) lived in Southern
California.
Type (A) people had a reason for
being, every right to live out their dramatic lives just as they were
doing.
Type (B) were temporary, in
transition, perpetually expected, and expecting, to be something else:
famous, rich, the subjects of their
own screenplays, younger, faster, happier, more beautiful.
No question which was the inferior
brand.
And, I knew my own
future, however predictable and normal, would be shaped by the forces
that had made L.A. a place of eternal impermanence, of abiding hope, of
endless ridicule.
Place mattered.
The car ahead left, and we moved up. I fell in love and
got married during college because that is what we did.
I got a real estate license because
the alternatives were becoming a decorator or a grade-school teacher.
At the usual time, I entered the
undistributed middle of California middle age.
I hoped, like the rest of us, to
appear somewhere between twenty-four and thirty-five for at least forty
years—always seeming to just dash in from a tennis match or the beach,
with sun-blonde hair, French manicure.
The only thing to be was in the
process of getting better. I fell out of love and got a divorce later on,
because that is what we did, too. Then, one day, the
real estate market went bust.
Not even a listing to
show.
And what to do with one's life, when
there was no romance and nothing to get a percentage of, was a mystery.
I would drive the freeways like some
wandering soul in a Joan Didion novel.
I didn't know how to play it.
Statistics said I had as much chance
of getting re-married as I did getting hijacked in an airplane.
Good sense said that I needed to have
some earning power.
I'd start in the south, drive up the
Riverside Freeway, go onto the Santa Ana Freeway, transition to the San
Bernardino, cut to the Ventura, and drive until I could see the leopard
spots of sage on the low hills, smell the dry, desert air coming through
the canyons.
Then back down the Hollywood Freeway,
through the Cahuenga Pass, and on to visit Mother at
Paradise
Home.
Later, Father would bar-be-que on the
back terrace and we would talk about old times on the Boulevard.
About him parking cars at
Grauman's
Chinese Theater,
or
about the old house at Yucca and Wilcox.
If the light held, he would draw me
out to the hillside, show me the new location of the comets.
I sometimes wondered
if the family lore might reveal what they learned about living here, if
the files in the study held a clue about what to be next.
But, really, I believed, I didn't need
to search the old papers and deeds to know what they said about Southern
California.
Just the other day, I
happened by the corner of Inglewood Boulevard where the Witchstand used
to be.
There's a 7-11 there now, and it was
draped with signs announcing the final day of a big lottery promotion;
people were lined up for three blocks to get a last chance to play.
I knew the real estate market would turn around,
I'd make a big sale, and my troubles would soon be over.
|
Backstory |
Story Glimspes End Augusta |
Califia Re | Roadhead | The Journey South | The Journey East | The Journey North | The Journey West |
Archives | Star Charts | Map Case | Augusta | Kaye | Calvin |